Olivia:
Yes, it's the store that's just a bus ride away.<grin>
I'm so ready!

Carolyn
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: olivia norman 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2010 10:41 AM
  Subject: Re: What do you think?


  That's great to hear! Is this at a local apple store? I am not surprised that 
apple is training people on their products, and hope that you have a good 
experience making the switch!
  Olivia

  On Apr 15, 2010, at 10:15 AM, Carolyn wrote:


    Hey I just gotta chime in here.  I live in Denver.  I'm having difficulty 
making the jump to my Mac.  I've called everywhere I can in Denver, looking for 
someone, anyone to give me the jump start/kick in the rear to really make this 
move from PC to Mac happen.  Guess who has offered the tutoring I need? ... no, 
not the NFB, Not Rehab, but Apple itself with a voice-over trained staffer.  
I'm starting next week!

    Carolyn
      ----- Original Message -----
      From: Cody
      To: [email protected]
      Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2010 1:36 AM
      Subject: Re: What do you think?


      Takes a deep breath.

      Oh yeah, like the damn nfb cares. if they cared so much, then why don't 
      training centers demo macs.

      It's call money. I hate the ***** nfb.
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: "Anne Robertson" <[email protected]>
      To: <[email protected]>
      Sent: Thursday, April 15, 2010 3:30 AM
      Subject: Re: What do you think?


      Hello Nic,

      Thank you for this post. You've just saved me from going on a major rant 
      along the same lines.

      Cheers,

      Anne

      On Apr 15, 2010, at 9:14 AM, Nicolai Svendsen wrote:

      > Hi,
      >
      > I seriously doubt that is the case. Apple accessibility has been around 
      > for six years now, not three. I doubt NFB had anything to do with it. 
      > Apple is going to keep it up because they are committed. The article 
about 
      > the lawsuit doesn't actually mention Apple much.
      >
      > There is actually a very good point of view. Apple poses a threat to 
the 
      > NFB of taking over the technical market. This is why NFB did not sue 
      > Skype, but Apple. Agreement or not, I'm pretty sure they listened to 
users 
      > using Outspoken and such, rather than an organization that can't even 
      > review the product properly when it is out. Apple has done far more 
than 
      > anyone for accessibility improvements. Apple said they had something in 
      > store, and they sure did. I of course realize that it is a pretty 
serious 
      > statement. Of course, I am not particularly a fan of the NFB at all. 
      > Saying that, NFB has made some seriously inaccurate statements as well, 
      > far outweighing mine. NFB actually has no reason to sue Apple. What 
would 
      > they sue them for, exactly? Because their products are accessible, and 
      > they want everyone to pay more than what a Macbook costs for assistive 
      > technology? That wouldn't actually surprise me much. It's all about 
      > competition. If they think they're about to be kicked out, of course 
they 
      > would consider Apple a threat. Because Apple has done something 
Microsoft 
      > has not. All these things sound really twisted and disgusting to me.
      >
      > Apple can hardly be sued for their effort. Their lawsuit had to do with 
      > iTunes on the Windows side. Fair enough, but that is a pretty 
ridiculous 
      > suit if it really is based on accessibility. That is not the case, 
      > however, as there are plenty of other useful programs for PCs that are 
not 
      > anywhere near as accessible as iTunes 9. And NFB doesn't care about 
that. 
      > Which, again, leads me to believe that, because NFB is scared of being 
      > kicked out, they do everything they can to stop people buying their 
      > product. That would make sense.
      >
      > Windows users rely on scripts all the time to use any application. I 
      > suggest you look through your jAWS folder to see what I mean. Have you 
      > even seen just the download size of a JAWS installation? It's 
outrageous. 
      > People who moan about iTunes not being accessible just because the 
      > interface accidentally broke, just need to use scripts like they do for 
      > everything else. I'm surprised that wasn't their first complaint. JAWS, 
or 
      > just Windows in general, isn't even that stable. If JAWS crashes, it's 
      > stupidly difficult most of the time to reload the product. Even if you 
      > manage to do so, you will probably run into the screen not being read 
      > correctly when reading list boxes or with the cursor. Or, the 
worst-case 
      > scenario. You have to uninstall JAWS 11 after attempting to install 
Video 
      > Intercept, reinstall JAWS 10, install VIdeo Intercept, uninstall JAWS 
10 
      > then reinstall JAWS 11.
      >
      > Maybe I'm slamming the NFB a bit, but really, they need a kick in the 
ass. 
      > I'm just happy the Danish blindness organizations are not this corrupt 
and 
      > twisted, and they actually review fairly and take a proper look at what 
a 
      > company offers before suing them. I'll always be negative about the 
NFB, 
      > though I am actually being neutral when talking about the actual 
lawsuit 
      > itself.
      >
      > Say what you want to, it won't change my mind. Even if it is someone 
from 
      > NFB saying it. Some NFB people are great. Some do incredibly good 
reviews. 
      > Some don't. And in whole, I think the organization just sucks for 
filing 
      > unnecessary lawsuits for nothing. Maybe I'm going on a childish tantrum 
      > here, perhaps. But once in a while, you need to. A company is trying to 
      > provide great accessibility for their products, and they are sued 
because 
      > of one problem. iTunes is actually still useful on the Windows side, 
      > people. Quit your darn nitpicking.
      >
      > Regards,
      > Nic
      > Skype: Kvalme
      > MSN Messenger: [email protected]
      > AIM: cincinster
      > yahoo Messenger: cin368
      > Facebook Profile
      > My Twitter
      >
      > On Apr 15, 2010, at 8:08 AM, Rob Lambert wrote:
      >
      >> I just got wind, from a friend of mine, that the only reason Apple is 
      >> accessible to us is because of a lawsuit by the NFB. The term of the 
      >> agreement was for accessibility improvements for three years. Here's a 
      >> question. First, what's your side of this ordeal? Second, who thinks 
      >> Apple will keep up with the accessibility improvements after this 
three 
      >> year term is up? I apologize for making smooth waters mirky, I just 
      >> wanted to know what your take on this was.
      >>
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